The Treatment Community

Comparing Behave Health and EHR Your Way for Addiction Treatment EHR Shoppers 

Comparing Behave Health and EHR Your Way and trying to decide which one is best fit for your addiction treatment or behavioral healthcare organization? 

Cybersecurity and Behavioral Health: How to Protect Your Addiction Treatment Organization

As behavioral health professionals, we are entrusted with some of the most sensitive and powerful information in our patients’ lives. We owe to our patients to protect this privilege carefully. 

Unlicensed and Dangerous? What the Growth of Recovery Coaching Means for the Addiction Treatment Community

There are no federal regulations around addiction treatment coaches, peer mentors or support specialists at this time.

Your Addiction Treatment Outcome Data Hinges on One Surprising Thing

What if we told you that your addiction treatment outcome data actually hinges on one thing?

Creative Ideas for Improving Addiction Treatment Accessibility Rates Capture the Imagination 

The answer to the addiction treatment accessibility problem seems obvious: simply make it easier for people who are suffering from SUD to access the care they need. The reality is not so simple. 

Addiction Treatment Parity Laws May Get an Update Soon - Here's What to Expect

Parity for addiction treatment and mental health care is the law of the land - in theory - but the execution of that reality has been shaky for years. That may soon change.

When Will it Get Better? Staffing Shortages in Addiction Treatment and How Smart EMR Use Can Help

The healthcare staffing shortage, and the behavioral health staffing shortage in particular, does not appear to be easing up any time soon. 

Is Integration with Primary Care Bad for Behavioral Health and Addiction Treatment Organizations?

Should we fear integrated care or embrace it as the future of addiction treatment?

Top 4 Most Wanted EMR Features for Addiction Treatment in 2024

ChatGPT, AI, Telehealth. in 2024, addiction treatment organizations are increasingly looking to EHR vendors to leverage these developments for improved patient outcomes and more efficient, affordable, accessible care. 

What are Digital Therapeutics and How Can You Incorporate Them Into Your Addiction Treatment IOP?

Digital therapeutics are one of the newest pharmaceuticals available for addiction treatment - but they’re not a pill.

Buying or Leasing a New Location? What to Look for in Addiction Treatment Real Estate Deals 

Finding right-sized real estate solutions to drive growth in your behavioral health or addiction treatment organization can prove to be very difficult.

How to Increase Patient Portal Engagement in Addiction Treatment Clients (and Why it Matters)

Without patient portal use, addiction treatment planning, medication management, patient-provider communication and alumni engagement all suffer. 


5 Most Common Mistakes Owners Make When Opening an Addiction Treatment Group Practice

Considering opening an addiction treatment, behavioral health or even mental health group practice? Congratulations! What you do at this moment will have lasting effects on your business for years to come.

Got Noise? How Noisy Charts are Hurting Your Addiction Treatment Center's Bottom Line

addiction treatment EHR EMR noisy charts clinical notes behavioral health

It’s no secret that addiction treatment clinicians are overwhelmed by the demands of clinical documentation. 

They are “bogged down in paperwork,” even if that “paperwork” is mostly virtual. 

Behavioral health professionals face some of the harshest clinical documentation requirements of any healthcare provider and they are often grappling with EHRs and clinical software that is outdated, ill-suited to the work, or simply non-existent. 

Behavioral health is naturally complex. The addiction treatment community’s emphasis on the biopsychosocial model means that every episode of care generates reams of patient data, SOAP notes, test results, clinical measures, patient reporting, care coordination documentation, and more. 

When poorly managed, patient data collected over the course of a single episode of care can become essentially incomprehensible. In these cases, it’s hard to tell the signal from the noise. 

Charts like these are called “noisy charts.”

What is a noisy chart? 

what is a noisy chart addiction treatment

A “noisy chart” is simply a chart with data that feels chaotic. It’s a chart that has too much “noise” competing for attention with the intended signal. It’s hard to read and hard to interpret. Working with noisy charts is aggravating, frustrating and inefficient.

Think of it like a crowded, noisy room. You’re trying to communicate with another clinician, colleague or insurance payer about an important patient matter but there’s so many other irrelevant noises happening in the background that you give up. Or maybe you keep trying to communicate but as you struggle to understand one another, mistakes are made. 

In addiction treatment, a “noisy chart” is usually comprised of some of the following common ingredients:

  • 943 pages of patient reported information, collected in a valiant attempt to deliver “patient-centered care,” never read

  • 230 random bits of PHI collected “just in case” but never used in any clinical sense 

  • 1,563 “record update notifications” collecting robotically in an inbox

  • Haphazardly entered data that does not allow for apples-to-apples comparison or analysis

Why Do Some Addiction Treatment EHRs or Patient Records Become Noisy? 

addiction treatment ehr emr noisy chart patient records

There are several causes of “noisy charts.” 

Occasionally, a wordy clinician is the cause of bloated, unwieldy charts. This, however, is the exception to the rule - most clinicians are too busy to waste time writing epic notes. 

More often, it’s the software design itself that inadvertently cultivates an ideal environment for “noise.” 

While some clinical noise is inevitable, as you learn more about EHR design and optimization, you’ll find that smart design and smart use goes a long way to cutting through the chatter. 

But first, let’s look at the top three consequences of noisy charts: damaged outcome measurements, staff burnout and attrition, and impaired care coordination.

Noisy Charts Damage Outcome Measurements and Make Value-Based Care Impossible

addiction treatment noisy chart outcomes measurement value based care

Your addiction treatment organization may be collecting patient data, but if it can’t be used to improve patient care, establish medical necessity, or track patient outcomes and treatment success, it’s not going to be very useful. 

As value-based care continues to loom on the horizon for the behavioral health industry, smart addiction treatment executives are choosing EHRs that can handle outcomes measurements. Documenting the “value” that treatment providers payers and patients can be difficult or impossible in a chaotic, “noisy” EHR environment.

Noisy Charts Pour Gasoline on Your Addiction Treatment Organization’s Staffing Crisis 

staffing crisis retention addiction treatment noisy chart

If your addiction treatment organization is having difficulty recruiting and retaining talented clinicians on your team, you’re not alone. Demand continues to skyrocket for behavioral health care in the wake of the pandemic as well as the surge in dangerous new drugs like fentanyl and P2P meth. As treatment becomes more complicated and demanding, clinician burnout also continues to rise. This combination of high patient demand and low treatment availability puts extra pressure on the system, leaving very few qualified professionals to accomplish urgently needed work. 

As with most problems, prevention is the smartest strategy. Instead of focusing on how to replace staff members lost to an ever-increasing rate of clinician attrition, why not focus on how to keep your existing staff in their roles as long as possible? 

If pay raises and other bonuses are off the table, what can you do to provide your clinicians with a more satisfying work experience?  

The secret to fostering a healthy and happy work environment is equipping your teams with the tools they need to get the job done well. One of the main tools that addiction treatment clinicians use day in and day out is their EHR - if they have access to one, that is. 

Just implementing any EHR and hoping for the best is unlikely to result in a happier staff. In fact, invest in the wrong system and watch as clinicians run screaming for the door. 

Yes, the frustration level can be that bad.

Noisy Charts Cripple Addiction Treatment Care Coordination 

addiction treatment behavioral health care coordination harder with noisy charts

When your charts are difficult to digest, interoperability - that easy flow of electronic information - suffers. When clinician communication is restricted, care coordination becomes clunky and disjointed, resulting in shoddy, redundant treatment and mistake-prone patient care.

Sometimes, nothing matters as much as your patient’s latest UA results. Other times, that group counseling note that contains vital information about relapse warning signs is the most important, life-saving update your team will receive all day. 

In a chaotic, noisy chart, these pieces of information don’t surface easily and when they do, it’s at the wrong time or the wrong place or both. The result? Balls get dropped. The “golden thread” or clinical narrative is broken. Need-to-know information isn’t passed on or it’s surrounded by so much irrelevant information that it’s overlooked.

An EHR Designed Especially for Addiction Treatment to Quiet the Noise 

Behave Health is committed to making it easier - and more profitable - to operate evidence-based, results-focused addiction treatment centers.

Our all-in-one app puts clinical, administration, staff, admissions, alumni, residents, treatment plans, billing, insurance authorizations and more - all at your fingertips.

Get your free trial started today and see why more addiction treatment centers prefer Behave Health.

PS. Just getting started with behavioral health? Need help with certification, too? Behave Health can also help direct you to the right resources for help with Licensing or Accreditation by either The Joint Commission or CARF. Mention to your product specialist that you’re interested in this service after you start your free trial!

What is 'Meaningful Use' and ‘Interoperability?’ Why Does it Matter for Addiction Treatment EHR Users?

Let’s define “meaningful use” and “interoperability” and take a look at what these terms mean in a behavioral health context.

AthenaHealth Causes Big Problems for Behavioral Health Group Practices and Outpatient Programs

With all of AthenaHealth’s merits, there are some serious cons to this software for addiction treatment group practice and outpatient program owners.

TheraNest's Failure to Support Addiction & Mental Health Inpatient & Outpatient Facilities

TheraNest consistently receives high ratings for its functionality in solo and small group practice settings, but can it keep pace with the demands of larger group practices and outpatient programs?

SimplePractice: Not an Easy Fit for Group Practice or Outpatient Behavioral Health Providers

Growth minded addiction treatment organizations should understand the limitations of SimplePractice before committing to this EMR.

Therapy Notes is a Bad Fit for Group Practice and Outpatient Programs Looking for a Behavioral Health EMR

Therapy Notes may not be the best choice for your small solo or group practice if you have an eye on expanding in the future.

Building Your Addiction Treatment Outpatient Program? Behave Community Helps Where Psychology Today Can’t

Here’s why Behave Community fills the gap for behavioral health professionals who want more out of their networking, referral partnerships, and marketing efforts.